Monday, September 15, 2014
How Much Do Americans Read?
The Pew Research Center released survey results in January of this year about Americans and how many books they are reading. The numbers were rather encouraging.
Here, for example, is the breakdown of the number of books read by men and women in 2013:
Mean Median
Total for all adults over 18 12 5
Men 10 4
Women 14 6
Older adults read more than younger adults. People with more years of schooling read more than those with fewer. People with higher incomes read more than people with lower incomes. No surprises in any of that.
Pew generated this information by conducting phone surveys -- landline and cell -- of Americans.
Here is my problem. I don't think the numbers add up.
I think when the phone survey people called Americans and asked how many books they had read, a lot of people thought to themselves, "Gee, I'll sound foolish if I say how little reading I do, so I'll just estimate on the high side."
Yes, I'm a cynic. But I found another study of American reading from 2002, and its results seem to back up what I'm saying.
Reading at Risk
This 2002 study by the National Endowment for the Arts compared reading trends for the previous 20 years. Here are some of the results.
1982 2002
Read any book in that year 60.9% 56.2%
Read a literary book that year 54.9% 46.6%
The NEA found a 10 percent decline in literary reading (novels, poems, plays), a drop of 20 million readers over the 20-year period. Among young adults aged 18 to 24, the drop was 28 percent. For adults aged 25-34, the drop was 23 percent.
If only 56 percent of adults read even one book in 2002, I don't see how you come up with a median (half read more, half fewer) reading rate of five books per person 11 years later as book-reading was continuing its decline.
Please note that I'm not saying people are reading nothing -- just a few weeks ago I noted that BuzzFeed attracts 150 million page views per month -- but that book reading is on the decline.
Another finding from the 2002 survey suggested a correlation between literary reading and civic participation, as well as involvement in other arts, in that year.
Literary Readers Non-literary Readers
Volunteer/charity Work 43.0% 17.0%
Visit Art Museums 44.0% 12.0%
Attend Performing Art Events 49.0% 17.0%
Attend Sporting Events 46.0% 27.0%
Conclusion:
It is not for me to say what people should do, and I know for a fact that a great many books being published these days are just plain dreadful. But the practice of reading and thinking about what you have read is helpful when you go to vote or when you are deciding which car to buy or which bank account works for you. Careful thinking is a skill like any other, improved with practice. For me, that has involved reading. Maybe there are other ways to get there; I hope people are finding them.
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Reading
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